A little over one month after the post on REDD-Monitor, I received an email from James Richards, Director of Baron Traders. “Obviously this posting is now having a drastic and detrimental effect on our business both in terms of reputation and economy,” Richards wrote. Which is perhaps surprising, considering that Naked Capitalism is a far more popular website than REDD-Monitor, and the only two pieces of information I added to Smith’s series of articles were that James Richards’ company is now operating under the name Baron Traders instead of Verified Carbon Credits, and that on its website Baron Traders was suggesting an average price for CERs of €14.69 (bizarrely based on predictions of the price for 2013). When I wrote about Baron Traders, CERs were selling at €0.57 on the European Energy Exchange, and the price now is €0.62.

Until now, I haven’t responded to Richards’ email. I don’t require “further clarification” – reading Baron Traders’ corporate brochure (pdf file, 725.1 KB) and website leaves little room for doubt that the company was at least attempting to sell carbon credits as investments, using a series of misleading statements.

Here, for example, is one of the misleading statements from Baron Traders’ brochure: “Market volumes and price forecasts for CERs are encouraging with significant growth expected between now and 2020.” This may have been true before the financial crisis started in 2008, but today it is pure fiction. A press release from Point Carbon, released a few months after Baron Traders’ brochure, predicts a fall in the price of CERs:

Thomson Reuters Point Carbon predicts sCER prices will average €1.6/t during phase 3 of the EU ETS, less than half its previous forecast. To 2014, Thomson Reuters Point Carbon predicts sCER prices will average €2.5/t, falling to €1/t in 2018 and 2019, and to 50 cents in 2020 due to the oversupply. The low price for sCERs may mean that investment in emission reduction projects under the CDM will dry up over the coming years.

In the disclaimer following his email to REDD-Monitor, Richards provides an email address for Baron Traders. But clicking on it brings up an email address for a company called Oakmount and Partners Ltd, whose website is “coming soon”. The website already includes the following warning:

Buying Investments can involve risk. The value of your Investments and the income from them can go down as well as up and is not guaranteed at any time.

You may get back less than you originally invested and in extreme circumstances, lose all of the value of your investment.

Meanwhile, Baron Traders has redesigned its website. No longer offering carbon credits as investments, the website announces that, “Currency Trading is the largest market in the world…”. I’ll leave you to make up your own mind up about whether this is another scam. “Minimum trade 10k – clients are accepted on a case-by-case basis.” Here’s a screenshot:

Published

It’s all the more annoying to see just how easily people like you and Richard Smith can raise serious questions about an apparently scam operation, yet we spend £millions to have regulators that appear to be incompetent and/or ineffective. An investigation into why the regulators are not dealing with this would seem to be urgently needed.

Precisely the same tactics used by Pure Carbon/Clear View (the same company). When I started raising a legal case against them and contributing to this blog they phoned me to say that I was damaging their ability to conduct their business and that major customers such as Newcastle FC and Mercedes would stop traiding with them. I assume that these statement are simply nonsense.

I got a call from these saying that it was fully FCA compliant and RDR ready. When asked about how and in what form the investor had protection she just said because they are RDR ready. Ha!! Then she starts harping on about commissions that they pay the adviser! Idiots.

REDDisms:

“Based on the Information and Transaction Law, photographs can be only be used as evidence if they are backed up by an official report from the investigation and direct [confirmation and] testimonies from employees from the company who joined the trip.”